79 Bay St
Double Bay NSW 2028
Australia

The best ILCA / Laser sailing club in the world, located in Double Bay on Sydney Harbour.

News

Tuesday 30 January - Limited Boat Access

Kirk Marcolina

The club is hired out for a fashion parade on Tuesday 30th of January. The event will mean that all boats North of the entrance to the changerooms will not be accessible from 2:30pm to 5:15pm. (This includes boats equal to and opposite the change room entrance.)

If you wish to access your boat between these times on Tuesday January 30th, please organise a temporary rack swap with someone who is positioned South of the changerooms. In addition, the changerooms may not be available during this time. If you wish to get changed, please do so in the centre of engineering excellence or in the 18footers bathrooms

Thanks in advance for your understanding.

Brett Beyer Program Update

Kirk Marcolina

The current Brett Beyer Saturday Program (BBSP) has had 8 instalments.  It will recommence for its final two instalments on 27 Jan and 17 Feb.  After that, there will be a 5-week program, commencing 24 February.  Excluded dates for the new series are 17 Mar (Metros), 31 Mar (Easter).  The series will end on 7 April as Brett is away after that. There will be two program options: "A" = $450, "B" = $225 (plus Try Booking fees) for the 5-week series. "A" and "B" both get a video of the start and the fleet's GPS tracks, plus fleet race commentary on a leg-by-leg basis.  "A" also gets an individual report on their race.  There will be no Option "C" this time. Those who are interested, please email training@dbsc.com.au.

The current Brett Beyer Wednesday Program (BBWP) has two instalments remaining: 24 Jan and 31 Jan.  The new series will commence 14 April, and will run for 7 weeks, with the last date being 28 March (end of daylight saving).  The cost will be $210 (plus try booking fees).  Limited to 10 participants, first in best dressed.  Email training@dbsc.com.au ASAP to secure your place.

Big Boat Report

Guest User

The wind gods kept their promise, and this race was sailed in ideal conditions - warm, sunny, a 10-15knot sea-breeze. It was a little more variable in pace and direction than some sea-breezes but - really - ideal.

Alas, after successive postponements of this race, caused by extreme weather the previous two Sundays, only three boats were there to take advantage. Still, Team DBSC swung into action for the start. Gerry (Umbakumba) gave us a timed start, from the Jazzman; it was the first time we had been started from the Arvor 21, and it was great. John Vasey, from the RIB Paul Adam, laid a brand new buoy at Point Piper. This was great service - thank you both.

The start wasn’t our greatest; only T&T was on time; Corinna was held up with a rigging problem, and was 2 minutes late to the start; and Smitten - was just late. On T&T, with a full crew, we were working smoothly through the fresh conditions; only a few errors. The Harbour was empty for a high summer’s day, and we had a good lead.

Still, Corinna is fast upwind, and closing the gap is something her skipper enjoys; it’s instinctive in a veteran racer. T&T was still well ahead at the Point Piper mark, again at the Taylors Bay mark; but as we approached the top mark - all three of these legs were upwind - we had choices to make. A huge tanker moored in the East Channel, and a series of ferries forced T&T to the right hand side of the course; we tacked for the top mark near Neilsen Park. Corinna was forced to the left side of the course, and tacked back somewhere off Clontarf. As we crossed, Corinna passed just behind our transom; he had made up those 2 minutes.  We had a few more tacks to do before reaching the mark and Sown’n Pigs, and we traded gains and losses as we crossed and recrossed. Impressively - Corinna rounded the mark just ahead; he had caught us.

But T&T is often the faster boat downwind; we quickly poled the jib to port and surfed, goose-winged, downhill to Shark island, reaching it 100m ahead of Corinna. Smitten sail well upwind and down but, though she is bigger and intrinsically faster, she is also heavier, and needs careful management and a clean hull to keep her moving against the Endeavour 24 and Hood 23. She had kept up with Corinna to Point Piper, but by Shark Island she was cruising well but out of contention.

On the last leg, a reach from Shark Island to Clark Island, Corinna again made time, but could only halve the gap to Time & Tide.

Across the line:

  • Time & Tide
  • Corinna
  • Smitten

We pulled down our headsails, sailed to our moorings with the wind in our mainsails, derigged and repaired to the Clubhouse to rehydrate, now following the 18s, who were racing in these very fresh conditions. The radio told us that on one the centreboard had snapped; she wobbled back downwind, with only her jib up. Another was against Clarke Island after losing her tiller pin. John V in the Paul Adam was attending. In the Clubhouse the radio crackled, binoculars were trained on the Harbour. The 18s were flying.

Another great afternoon’s sailing.

Big boaters - we sail again (after the postponements) in just weeks - on February 4

Australian Youth Championships

Clare Alexander

Australian Youth Championships have been run and won!

The Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron has hosted the Summer of Sailing with multiple regattas, hundreds of boats and even more Youth sailors! Team DBSC Youth have had a successful summer at RQYS and we are very excited to share the exciting news of the results of our youth fleet in both the 4.7 and Radial fleets – Boys AND girls!

4.7 (46 competitors)

  • 4th – Daniel Costandi
  • 6th – Sylvie Stannage – AND 1st girl – woohoo!
  • 8th – Mark Louis
  • 9th – Brooke Wilson

Radials (38 competitors)

  • 5th – Zac West- led the fleet on the first day with 3 bullets – woohoo!
  • 7th – Jack Littlechild
  • 12th – Campbell Patton
  • 18th – Maddie O’Shea – and 2nd girl! 

Maddie O’Shea sailed like a super star during both regattas and has secured her place in the Australian Youth Sailing Team and will be off to Corpus Christie, Texas, USA during the year to compete in the Youth Worlds. Congratulations Maddie  – we look forward to following your sailing throughout the year!

Windy Start for Autumn Pointscore

Kirk Marcolina

A very strong south-westerly breeze greeted a small post-holiday fleet of sailors for the first two heats of the Autumn 2018 Pontscore. After handicaps, in the Full Rigs Mark Bethwaite won both races and in the Radials / 4.7s, Pat Levy did the same.  Please note that The Autumn Pointscore competition for Radials will also include 4.7s as a trial. Either rig can be used by any competitor. Handicaps will equalise to allow 4.7s to compete against the rest of the fleet with a chance for the "Gold Ink" at the end of the season. This applies to POINTSCORE ONLY to allow the small 4.7 fleet to try for the trophy. Championship events are still separated by class.

The Week Ahead

Kirk Marcolina

Wednesday 17 January, 5pm – Twilight Sailing. No Brett Beyer but we’ll be out for some informal sailing (Brett’s back next week – 24 January). Sign up here if you’re coming.

Saturday 20 January, 9am – Learn to Race. Come along if you want to learn more about Laser boat handling, balance, boat posture, trim, starts, tacks, gybes, boat set-up and any other race management fundamentals. Please email Martin White at mwhite@universalmagazines.com.au if you plan on attending.

Saturday 20 January, 2pm Start – Autumn Pointscore Heats 3 & 4. 

Last Saturday’s Sprints

Kirk Marcolina

Our first event for 2018 was sprint racing on Saturday. It was a beautiful, warm afternoon, with a rapidly strengthening NNE gradient breeze, starting at 17-22kts and increasing to 23-28kts by the time we finished our six short 15-minute races.  The outgoing tide made for brutal chop upwind and exciting rides downwind.

We fielded a fleet of 15 boats with good close racing and plenty of top mark action on the shortened course. Our on-water team of Hadrien Bourley (PRO), Derek Hand and Geoff Kirk, set a great course and conducted the races well.  Several of us were a little dusty after too much eating and drinking over the holidays, evidenced by hiking fatigue, sloppy mark roundings, and plenty of capsizes!

Ashley Deacon, fresh back from a broken leg, gave us a good show when he forgot how far to duck in a powerful gybe, and found himself flung from his boat, seriously dazed, with an enormous gash on his head, and blood everywhere. Thanks to our on-water team for a snappy rescue, after which Hadrien sailed Ash's boat back to shore, and Geoff "The Doctor" Kirk administered some quality first aid, before Mike Dunne drove Ash to hospital for a check-up.  Three stitches later, all ended well.  Ash sent a text asking us to pass on his thanks to everyone for all their assistance.  Let's see if he wears a helmet on Wednesday.

The Week Ahead

Kirk Marcolina

Wednesday 10 January, 5pm – Informal Twilight Sailing. Please note Brett Beyer will not be coaching tonight, but we’ll still be sailing. Sign up here if you’re coming.

Saturday 13 January, 2pm Start – Autumn Point Score Heats 1 & 2. The first official races for 2018 are here. Make them count!   

Sunday 14 January, 2pm Start – Big Boat Racing. Right now, Time & Tide, Smitten, Umbakumba, G-Force and Calypso Magic are scheduled to compete. Please let Jonathan Stone know if you want to join the fleet.